NEW CIA NOMINEE CONSIDERED

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP99-01448R000301290081-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 23, 2016
Document Release Date: 
May 21, 2013
Sequence Number: 
81
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
March 2, 1987
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP99-01448R000301290081-5.pdf153.61 KB
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o Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/21 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301290081-5 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE CHICAGO TRIBUNE 2 March 1987 New CIA nominee considered White House now shying from Gates ..7 By John N. Maclean and ChristonheerrDrai Chicago Tribune WASHINGTON-The White House is seeking a possible re- placement for Robert Gates as its nominee to head the CIA, ac- cording to congressional sources, and Senate Republican Leader Bob Dole on Sunday recom- mended Gen. Brent Scowcroft for the job. Scowcroft, former national se- curity adviser under President Gerald Ford and who served on the presidential review board that investigated the U.S.-Iran arms affair, could not be reached for comment. Dole [R., Kan.] and other Re- publican leaders 'told President Reagan Friday that Gates' nomi- nation was in trouble, even though Gates was not directly implicated in the Tower Board's report, sources said. Dole and the others told Reagan that the report made the CIA look bad, and that rubbed off on Gates, 43, a career CIA man who was deputy to former CIA director William __Casey. . nU a congressional source said Sunday that as a result, "there is an active move to look at other folks" on the part of the White House. But the administration has not yet withdrawn Gates' Robert Gates nomination. Dole said Scowcroft would make a good candidate for the CIA post, which Howard Baker, who was named %Vhite House chief of staff after the Tower re- port was released Thursday. had turned down this year. Dole was asked on NBC-TV's "Meet The Press" whether he thought Gates' nomination should be withdrawn. "I know it's been discussed at the White House," Dole said. explaining that he told Reagan last week that Gates' nomination "could be in some difficulty if there was a demand" for a quick vote. "I would guess that there would be some judgment made on this early this week" at the White House, Dole said. The Senate Intelligence Commit- tee will meet Wednesday to con- sider Gates' confirmation. and to set a timetable for voting. Sen. David Boren [D., Okla.], chairman of the committee, has said he wants an early vote to avoid a lack of leadership at the CIA. Sen. Sam Nunn [D., Ga.], a member of the committee, said over the weekend that Gates had a "51 to 49" percent chance of being turned down by the commit- tee. Sen. Bill y,.jD , N.J.], an- of a mem er of the committee and one of the lawmakers who was highly critical of Gates during two days of public confirmation hearings last month, was especially concerned by a Tower Board find- ing that the CIA had `.`tailored its intelligence assessment on Iran to fit the needs of policy makers at the White House." Bradley and others want to ask Gates more questions about that assessment. Gates came under considerable fire from Bradley and others for failing to investigate when he first heard speculation about a diver- sion of profits to the Nicaraguan rebels stemming from the U.S. sale of weapons to Iran. Gates defend- ed himself by saying the CIA was under orders to stay as far away as rnfntt? Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/21 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301290081-5 Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/21 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301290081-5 possible from any private funding of the rebels, known as contras, in order to avoid even the appear- ance of violating a congressional ban on assistance to the guerrillas. A source close to the Intelli- gence Committee said Gates doesn't come out "looking all that badly" in the Tower Board report. But he said he thought the agency as a whole came off "not that well." He said the investigators found "a level of involvement" by the CIA in National Security Council aide Oliver North's pri- vate contra-aid efforts that "is maybe greater than we might have known." The Tower Board reported that Gates supplied North, a marine lieutenant colonel, with intelli- gence on the Soviet threat to Iran, information that North passed on to Iranian intermediary Manucher' Ghorbanifar in Paris in March, 1986. This apparently is a reference to the CIA assessment, prepared while Gates was directly responsi- ble for intelligence analysis, that the Tower Board found was pre- pared in conjunction with the NSC staff. The report also quoted a memo from former national security ad- viser John Poindexter to North in' mid-summer of 1986 that men- tioned Gates. In response to North's suggestion that Poindexter pressure the CIA to use North's network of former military and in- telligence officials after $100 mil- lion in new congressional aid began last October, Poindexter wrote: "I did tell Gates that I thought the private effort should be phased out." Then Poindexter said: "Please talk to Casey about this. I agree. with you." This reference could be somewhat damaging to Gates in that it suggests he knew in some detail about the private aid net- work that North had established. On the other hand, the CIA was allowed at this time to provide in- telligence to the contras. The report strongly criticized Casey for apparently having "ac- quiesced in" North's "exercise of direct operational control over the Iranian operation." The board said: "There is no evidence, however, that director Casey explained this risk to the President or made clear to the President that Lt. Col. North, rather than the CIA, was running the operation.... Indeed, director Casey should have gone further and pressed for operational re- sponsibility to be transferred to the CIA." The board also said Casey, who resigned last month after under- going brain cancer surgery in De- cember, should have been more skeptical of Israeli intentions and of Ghorbanifar's credibility and should have "taken the- lead in keeping the question of congres- sional notification alive." The richest detail of the Tower report dealt with Ghorbanifar's failure of a polygraph test and Casey's decision to nevertheless keep relying on him. The report quoted from a memo by retired CIA official George Cave reporting that Ghor ai wed at a Washington hotel on Jan. 11, 1986. It showed that the examiner found evidence of deception in Ghorbanifar's answers to 13 of 15 relevant questions. The memo indicated that the truthfulness of his re- sponses to the other two questions was inconclusive. Among the answers that ap- peared to be deceptive were Ghor-. banifar's denials that he was trying to deceive the CIA about his Iranian contacts' influence over Is- lamic Jihad, a pro-Iranian Shiite Moslem group that is holding some of the American hostages in Lebanon., Cave said the polygraph examin- er concluded that Ghorbanifar "was indeed a fabricator of evi- dence." Cave noted that lie-detec- tor. tests taken by Ghorbanifar in March and June, 1984, "had pro- duced the same conclusion." Despite all of this, the report said, the White House decided to keep using Ghorbanifar as an in- termediary, with Casey concurring in the decision. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2013/05/21 : CIA-RDP99-01448R000301290081-5